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Claire Keegan wins $54,854 Siegfried Lenz Prize for literature

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Siegfried Lenz Prize
The Chairman of the Siegfried Lenz Foundation, Günter Berg, awards the Siegfried Lenz Prize 2024 to the Irish writer Claire Keegan in Hamburg. Photo: Ulrich Perrey/dpa

 

The jury described 56-year-old Keegan as “one of the great European storytellers.” Her works have been translated into 30 languages and have also been made into films

 

Admin I Friday, October 04, 2024

 

HAMBURG – Irish writer Claire Keegan was on Friday awarded Germany’s prestigious Siegfried Lenz Prize  for Literature 2024. The Prize is with endowed with  the sum of €50,000 ($54,854),

The jury described 56-year-old Keegan as “one of the great European storytellers.” Her works have been translated into 30 languages and have also been made into films.

Based on the book of the same name, the film “Small Things Like These” with Irish Oscar winner Cillian Murphy premiered at the Berlinale film festival this year.

The literary prize is awarded every two years to international writers “whose creative work is close to the spirit of Siegfried Lenz,” the late German writer of novels, short stories and essays.

Siegfried Lenz was born in Lyck, a small town in Masuria, in 1926. After leaving high school early under special wartime arrangements, he joined the navy in 1943. Before the end of the war, Lenz defected to Denmark. He was held by the British as a prisoner of war for a short time and later returned on his own to Germany.

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The same year, he began studying philosophy, English and German at the University of Hamburg. When he was offered the opportunity to do a traineeship at the newspaper “Die Welt” 1948, he abandoned his studies. He worked on the paper’s editorial staff as an arts and features editor until the successful publication of his first novel “Es waren Habichte in der Luft” (1951, t: There were goshawks in the air) allowed him to leave.

From 1952 onwards, he regularly attended the literary meetings of the “Gruppe 47″(Group 47), where he met other prominent authors such as Günter Grass and Ingeborg Bachmann. Alongside Grass, Siegfried Lenz became involved with Germany’s Social Democratic Party (SPD) and Willy Brandt’s “Ostpolitik”, with which he found resonance owing to his background.

Lenz has dealt with his ties to his childhood in Masuria in several literary works, such as the short story collection “So zärtlich war Suleyken” (1955; t: So tender was Suleyken) and the novel “Heimatmuseum” (1978; Engl. “The Heritage”, 1981).

Lenz  said “For me, writing is the best opportunity to learn to understand people, actions and conflicts”. For that reason, he usually makes use of a classic, realistic writing style to explore modern historical themes, much as does Hemingway.

His most well-known novel,  “Deutschstunde” (1968; Eng. “The German Lesson”, 1971), is the wartime and post-war story of a young German man who rebels against his dutiful father. In the best-seller, the author turns a critical eye on the themes of duty and responsibility in post-war Germany.

In addition to novels and short stories, the author has also written dramas and radio plays. While he functioned, in his early works, as a »portraitist of Germany in its brokenness, on its way to finding itself again« (Fritz J. Radatz, DIE ZEIT), his later works are more often devoted to psychological themes.

In his novella, “Schweigeminute” (2008; t: Minute of silence), a student attending a memorial service for his former teacher recollects their deep, forbidden love affair. He has been awarded many prizes, including the Peace Prize of the German Book Trade, the Goethe Prize of the City of Frankfurt and, recently, the Lew Kopelew Prize for Peace and Human Rights. Siegfried Lenz died in Hamburg in 2014.

 

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